These are very good times for Reckless Kelly. With the release of BULLETPROOF in 2008, the
Austin-based roots rockers known for the integrity of their musical approach, the hard-core energy of their live shows and the fierce loyalty of their fans turned up the intensity on their career. The album quickly became the band’s biggest seller, hitting the Billboard 200 and reaching the Top 25 of the magazine’s Top Country Albums chart. It contained the band’s first #1 on both the Texas and Americana charts, “Ragged as the Road,” and earned it a nomination as Best Band or Duo at the 2009 Americana Music Awards, a show that put Reckless Kelly on stage with the country’s best at the Ryman Auditorium. BULLETPROOF also featured “American Blood” and “God Forsaken Town,” widely regarded songs that link Reckless Kelly to a workingclass tradition of socially conscious music that stretches from Woody Guthrie to Bruce Springsteen.
The fact that “God Forsaken Town” was written by Reckless Kelly singer-songwriter Willy Braun with Robert Earl Keen is symbolic of the fact that the band’s standing among its peers has
never been higher. The respect band members have earned from everyone from Steve Earle to Kevin Welch can be summarized by Joe Ely, who called Reckless Kelly “my kind of band: hellraising, hard-playing, kick-ass songwriting, feet firmly in the present, but with an amazing knowledge of where it has all come from.”
It is praise that reverberates especially well in the context of the group’s latest work. With new album, SOMEWHERE IN TIME, Reckless Kelly digs deep into its roots, revisiting the music of
Pinto Bennett, who with his band the Famous Motel Cowboys influenced a generation of
musicians in the Northwest and served as a mentor and idol to Braun and his brother, Cody,
whose fiddle, mandolin, harmonica and vocal work help propel Reckless Kelly. In the company
of their bandmates — David Abeyta on lead guitar and lap steel, Jay Nazz on drums, and Chris
Schelske on bass — the Brauns explore their country influences and re-introduce Bennett’s music to a new generation of fans while placing their indelible, rock-edged stamp on it.
“While this is Pinto’s material, this is very much a Reckless Kelly record. It’s simply a bunch of great songs we thought people should hear,” explains Cody. “A lot of Texas bands have been pushing country more toward rock,” says Nazz, “but to go back to playing real country music turned out to be extremely rewarding for us as a band.”
Adds Willy: “It’s not too far a departure from what we’ve done in the past, but it reminds me of
the old days when we were playing four sets a night, doing a lot more honky-tonk stuff, playing
the real dance halls.”
Highlights from the new record include “You Cared Enough to Lie,” a honky-tonk masterpiece
tailor-made for the stage; the tragedy of “The Ballad of Elano DeLeon”; and “Some People’s
Kids,” which updates the kind of rock-country hybrid explored on the West Coast beginning in
the late ’60s. Instrumentally, the project kicks up the classic country flourishes — there is steel guitar on seven tracks — but their in-the-pocket rhythm section, Cody’s fiddle and mandolin, the crisp guitars, and raw energy are all pure Reckless Kelly.
Much in the way that Waylon Jennings found his narrative voice through the words and songs of
Billy Joe Shaver on the classic album HONKY TONK HEROES, SOMEWHERE IN TIME finds Reckless Kelly using Bennett’s songs as a tool to illuminate another aspect of its true artistic identity.
Bennett himself joined the band in the studio for two tracks (“He did ’em in one take,” says
Willy), as did former Bennett cohorts like guitarist Sergio Webb, guitarist-engineer Rob Matson and Teddy Ray Jones, who joined Cody for some twin fiddle work. “Even though it’s a little
different from our other albums,” says Nazz, “it never felt forced or outside our comfort zone. It
always felt pretty natural, and I think you can hear that.”
The project is the perfect gateway to understanding the life and music that have been inextricably bound since the Brauns’ boyhoods near Challis, Idaho. Their grandfather, professional musician Musty Braun, passed his love of music to their father, Muzzie, whose family western swing band eventually included Willy, Cody and their brothers Micky and Gary.
“Our mother was the only person in the family that didn’t play anything,” Willy says, and she
served as the band’s road manager. The family act played everywhere from the Grand Ole Opry
to “The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.” By their teen years, the Braun brothers were
bringing a host of other influences to their music, and as they formed their own band they drew on the practical wisdom that existed in the very lives of their father and his friends. “They showed us you could make records on your own,” says Cody. “You didn’t have to have a label. You could make your own records and T-shirts, hire a publicist and do everything on your own. It’s how we started, knowing we could make a living doing it.”
After a period performing in the Northwest, they moved to Austin, whose artist-friendly atmosphere and egalitarian club scene proved to be the most fertile possible soil. “The college
kids and the party scene helped amplify everything,” says Cody. “The live show came around to a real party atmosphere, just having fun and getting people to whoop it up.”
Reckless Kelly’s 1998 debut, MILLICAN, brought the twang, the energy and the hooks together,
earning the band four Austin Music Awards for Best Roots Rock act. Each new record swelled its
fan base and widened its geographic impact. “With every new album,” says Willy, “we’ve exceeded the sales of the last one, and every time we go into the studio we try to raise the bar on production and the quality of songs. And each time a few more radio stations play our music and more people come to shows.”
With increased visibility has come the opportunity to give back, and 2009 saw the group’s first Celebrity Softball Jam raise $30,000 for Austin youth charities. In addition to appearances at military base benefits, it has launched Reckless Soldiers, using its Web site to help military personnel connect with family, friends and supporters.
Whether it’s dedication to charity work, playing live or the art of writing a timeless tune,
Reckless Kelly is tireless in its pursuit of excellence. This attitude and near legendary propensity for a good time ensures band members’ success as artists. The SOMEWHERE IN TIME project
is no exception. “I think this time,” adds Willy, “we did again what we always set out to do: make a record we can be proud of.”

RK is one of the best American bands out there. You have to see and hear them live to really appreciate these musicians. I just wish they'd play in the Northeast more often. Plus the fact that they are some cool dudes!

Reckless Kelly 09/08/2010

Pimp Daddy Hogue

Best band ever? You know it.

Reckless Kelly 05/12/2010

red dirt girl

love love love "somewhere in time" good to know theres still good music being made out there... reckless kelly is def one of my favorite bands

Reckless Kelly 04/21/2010

Mark

Have never been a big RK fan, till I saw an acoustic peformamce of "Cared Enough to Lie". What have I been missing? There is such a honky tonk feel to some of the cuts on "Somewhere in Time" my wife likes this cd. This is the same band that used to be Chris Walls band!! Time to start picking up old material and the Pinto Bennett collection. Stay on the hardwood floors!!

Reckless Kelly 04/21/2010

Mark

Have never been a big RK fan, till I saw an acoustic peformamce of "Cared Enough to Lie". What have I been missing? There is such a honky tonk feel to some of the cuts on "Somewhere in Time" my wife likes this cd. Thsi is the same band that used to be Chris Walls band!! Time to start picking up old material and the Pinto Bennett collection. Stay on the hardwood floors!!

Reckless Kelly 04/03/2010

shade

somewhere in time is a beautiful album...yes it is covers i suppose..but they took each song and made them their very own...was a labor of love for them as pinto is their hero.. was like steppin back in time 25 years and bein drunk dancin with pretty girls at the stockmans casino in elko whilst pinto played on... only better........

Reckless Kelly 03/22/2010

RK Fan

This album is beyond brilliant. What a great thing to do. Introduce people to the brilliant Pinto Bennett. Such an amazing songwriter. The playing is top notch and the vocals are great. This was a gutsy move by RK and it really proves that this band always puts good music first.

Reckless Kelly 03/13/2010

lmoon

Wow! What an album! It's almost too good to be real.....it's better than five stars...

Reckless Kelly 03/13/2010

dlee

Am wearing it out. I love all their albums, but this one is a knockout! Can't say enough good about it. It showcases their many talents. Pure Quill is my fave of the songs...but it was hard to choose, they are ALL good.

Reckless Kelly 02/16/2010

D

This isn't your typical RK album with the grunge and rusted sound. At first i didnt like it but its starting to grow on me. If your thinking of buying this CD as your first RK CD dont! buy one of their other ones then move on to this one.